Simone en Christo bij Omroep Brabant | 2TTOYS ✓ Official shop<br>

Simone and Christo at Omroep Brabant

LEGO is becoming increasingly popular. In the first half of this year, three percent more construction kits were sold than the previous half year. This is because more and more adults have started building with the blocks. Lego fan Christo (64) from Best has an attic full of LEGO buildings and understands the popularity: “It calms me down. It's a toy hobby.”
And thanks to the bad summer, turnover will continue to increase in the second half of this year, says Simone van Nuland from the LEGO store in Den Bosch. “It is becoming increasingly popular with adults as LEGO releases special lines, such as the Eiffel Tower in Paris and the Taj Mahal in India.”

“When I'm working on LEGO, I'm just not there for a while.”

You can hardly take a step in Christo's attic. Dozens of buildings stand out there. “Not everything fits here in the attic. The Titanic is downstairs in the living room, but my wife won't let me add anything to it.” Christo's wife has nothing to do with the blocks at all.

Yet Christo is allowed to build and collect to his heart's content. “We have an agreement together: we both get 150 euros every month. What we do with that money is up to us, the other person is not allowed to interfere. For me it always goes to LEGO.”

It once started with model trains, but they had to make way for the colored blocks. “Yes, it's a toy. I see it as a toy hobby. I relax when I'm working with LEGO, then I'm just not there for a while. And I can express my creativity,” says Christo as he shows the buildings in his attic. “If I want to muse for a while, I go to the attic: look, clean and change things.”

“It's not expensive, it's sustainable.”

A woman comes to Simone's LEGO store to buy a set. “It's for myself, not for my daughter,” she laughs. “The shame is gone,” Simone notes. “We have been here for twenty years now. In the beginning, people gave the excuse that they were coming to get it for their nephew, but now they dare to say that it is for themselves.”

Christo is also critical: “It is far too expensive. It can be done much cheaper, but yes that is a marketing strategy of LEGO.” For example, a set for adults easily costs between two hundred and five hundred euros. Because it is on the expensive side, Christo occasionally buys 'fake LEGO'. “There are brands where the quality and colors are exactly the same.”

Simone disagrees with Christo. “It's not expensive, it's sustainable,” she defends. “Thirty years later, children still play with the same LEGO bricks. They just pass from father to son.”

“It's full, but I won't stop."

How many more LEGO sets can Christo have? “Minus two,” he says with a smile. “It's full, but I don't stop. Sometimes I sell a set. It is also an investment. I sell sets for double or sometimes more.”

The store in Den Bosch contains a 'mega investment'. “There is a blue house here. It cost a hundred euros about fifteen years ago, now you can sell it for 3,500 euros.”

Simone van Nuland from 2T-Toys in Den Bosch (photo: Noël van Hooft)
Simone van Nuland from 2T-Toys in Den Bosch (photo: Noël van Hooft)
They recreated Jan de Groot in the Lego store in Den Bosch (photo: Noël van Hooft)
They recreated Jan de Groot in the Lego store in Den Bosch (photo: Noël van Hooft)
Profile photo of Noël van Hooft
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